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June Market Update

Real Estate

June Market Update

Our team is committed to continuing to serve all your real estate needs while incorporating safety protocol to protect all of our loved ones.
 
In addition, as your local real estate experts, we feel it’s our duty to give you, our valued client, all the information you need to better understand our local real estate market. Whether you’re buying or selling, we want to make sure you have the best, most pertinent information, so we’ve put together this monthly analysis breaking down specifics about the market.
 
As we all navigate this together, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us with any questions or concerns. We’re here to support you.
 
Anna Bellomo, DRE #1822897

 
Welcome to our June newsletter. This month, we’ll continue to update you with important information about your local real estate market. First, we will cover new survey data from the California Association of Realtors (CAR) that shows buyers and sellers are operating under differing expectations about the real estate market. Following that, we will review the local market. Although 2020 is proving to be unique, we hope to provide you with an encouraging analysis of May’s housing data as well as an overview of our expectations moving forward as we phase out of the strict stay-at-home orders.
 
This month’s topics include:
 
  • Key News and Trends Impacting Your Local Market: The June CAR survey reveals a rift between buyer and seller expectations. Median home prices remain resilient. Sellers are more hesitant to enter or remain in the market, while buyer demand gets a lift and mortgage applications rise.
  • May Housing Market Update: Housing inventory begins to decline again. Single-family homes and condos continue to sell close to list price, and homes under contract steadily climb.

 
Key News and Trends Impacting Your Local Market
 
Since most California counties are beginning to lift restrictions, we will start to see the housing market steadily recover. Although an exact end date to quarantine does not exist, on May 20th, Governor Newsom confirmed that more than half of the state’s 58 counties were moving into phase two of the widely adopted “four-pronged approach.”
 
On June 3rd, the California Association of Realtors (CAR) released survey data sampling California agents and their clients over the last week of May. The results revealed that buyers and sellers are now operating under very different expectations about the real estate market: the majority of buyers expect home prices to be lower while only a small number of sellers are reducing their listing prices.

In the long run, who is right will depend on how long the economic recovery takes. In the short term, however, the data tells us that single-family home buyers, at least, appear to have wishful thinking.
 
East Bay median home prices did not decline enough for sellers to cut the listing price. In May, single-family home prices were only down slightly compared to the previous year. The May decrease trends in-line with California as a whole.

Compared monthly, prices did decline, most notably in the Alameda condo market. However, monthly price movements, which are more volatile and often don’t capture as accurate a picture as year-over-year comparisons, will require sustained declines before homeowners should start pricing their homes materially below comparables.

Weighing in on the subject in his June 3rd market update, Jordan Levine, Deputy Chief Economist at CAR, said:
 
“We [now] expect some price impacts eventually as a result of some of the negative economic impact. . . . The price impacts will be in the modest category of the low single digits for 2020.”
 
Evidence supports the idea that price declines will only be in the low single digits for the 2020 calendar year. The market continues to see a larger sell-side impact, meaning that housing supply has declined more than buyer demand. The survey data below shows that far more sellers withdrew listings than buyers withdrew offers.

While sellers continue to grapple with the state of the market, California is again facing a major housing shortage, which prevents prices from dropping. The CAR survey also provided the most recent mortgage application data for both California and the United States. In May, California mortgage applications for home purchases (as opposed to refinances) rose significantly from April and are only down 1.7% from this time last year. Mortgage applications correlate with buyer intent to purchase a property and indicate the number of homes under contract and home sold.

All of this is welcome news. The May data assures homeowners that their home equity is still intact as restrictions begin to lift. It should also encourage buyers who may have been delaying a home purchase to enter the market.
 
A fourth CAR survey result illustrates the degree to which both supply and demand is currently stagnating. Over half of the California realtors surveyed indicated that they had at least one client that was delaying buying or selling until conditions changed. We assume that this pent-up demand will give way in the coming months to more participation and market activity from both sides.

Alongside pent-up demand, there are the changes to daily living which may impact home purchasing decisions in the future. In order to ensure employee safety, companies have massively shifted toward a remote workforce, which creates new space requirements for potentially millions of Americans. As a result, millions of Americans may need to consider purchasing a new home that better accommodates work from home. Remote work also means employees can live almost anywhere. Without physical restrictions, employees may look elsewhere for places to live such as locations with lower costs of living. Between new housing requirements, low rates, and pent-up activity, there is potential for a busy summer buying season that is similar to what we usually see in the spring.

 
May Housing Market Update for the East Bay
 
Over the last three months, the housing market has changed so rapidly that we began to look at the data on a weekly basis rather than a month monthly basis (as is typical) to illustrate how significantly the market has changed over a shorter timeline.
 
In the month of May, the weekly East Bay housing data for single-family homes supported the survey data from CAR. First, housing inventory is again in decline as sellers continue to hesitate and withdraw listings from the market.

The decline in inventory is also due to an increase in buyer demand; homes under contract have increased steadily since the phased reopening of the economy began. They have risen well past  pre-pandemic levels in early March.

The sale-to-list ratio reflects the change in the original list price and the final sale price of a home. For example, a ratio of 100% means that a home sold for the price at which it was most recently listed. In the East Bay, sale-to-list prices have been consistent; buyers and sellers are negotiating the final sale price in line with the list price.

We also look at months supply of inventory, which measures how many months it would take for all current listings on the market (including listings under contract) to sell at the current rate of sales. In May, the months supply for single-family homes rose. This may seem counterintuitive to the weekly data above (which shows less inventory and more homes under contract), but remember that months supply compares inventory to sales. Low sales volumes recorded in May are the result of the low volume of homes under contract in late March and early April; said another way, homes under contract turn into sales around 30 days later. Expect recorded sales volume to increase in June and months supply to decrease.

In May, sales volume was only slightly down from the previous year (6.4%) in Contra Costa and rebounded from April lows. Sales are down by double digits in neighboring Alameda compared to May 2019. As May homes under contract convert to recorded sales in June, we expect the year-over-year gap to narrow through the summer months.

As we discussed in previous newsletters, the fundamentals of the housing market were strong before the global economy stalled, and they have continued to show stability during the months of quarantine.
 
Looking ahead to July, we anticipate housing market activity to increase as pent-up demand turns into participation from both sides. We will closely monitor the evolving state of the market to make sure that our clients are pricing and negotiating to get the most value out of their transactions.
 
As always, we remain committed to helping our clients achieve their current and future real estate goals. Our team of experienced professionals would be happy to discuss the information we’ve shared in this newsletter. We welcome you to contact us with any questions about the current market or to request an evaluation of your home or condo.


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